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No ‘moral blackmail’ over asylum seekers, says PM Tony Abbott

Abbott won't bow to 'moral blackmail' after deadly riot on Manus Island

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An image from an Australian Broadcasting Corporation video of clashes at the Manus Island detention centre on Sunday. Photo: Reuters

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott yesterday said he would not succumb to "moral blackmail" over a detention centre on Papua New Guinea, as graphic witness accounts of recent violence told of "blood everywhere".

Unrest at the Manus Island camp this week left an Iranian man dead and more than 70 injured as tensions flared among inmates about their fate under Australia's harsh asylum-seeker policies.

Canberra has sent the head of its military-run Operation Sovereign Borders, Angus Campbell, to the island to assess security and work out what happened.

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Despite the violence and demands from refugee advocates that the facility, condemned by the UN, should be closed, Abbott said he would not step back from his strong border-protection policies.

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"We will not succumb to pressure, to moral blackmail," he said. "We will ensure these camps are run fairly, if necessary, firmly."

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